For all that was rumored about The Last Jedi before its release, one of its greatest surprises was a brief, but special appearance by a very familiar Star Wars face. But bringing back such a beloved character was a daunting prospect for the team behind the film—not just for story reasons, but from a physical design standpoint.

Advertisement

Yoda’s Force-spirit appearance in The Last Jedi is brief, but fundamental to the movie’s take on Luke Skywalker, as well as its overarching themes of letting go of the past and learning from failure. But Yoda’s presence in the movie also had to achieve something equally important: the character’s actual look and feel, especially as a continuation of how we saw Yoda in Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. In the years since we’ve seen Yoda primarily as a CG character, whether it’s in the Clone Wars cartoon or his CG appearances in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith—which became pretty much the default Yoda “look” for so long that eventually the kinda-dodgy puppet of him seen in The Phantom Menace got painted over with the CG Yoda in the 2011 Blu-ray rerelease.

With the sequel trilogy’s often-invoked desire to return to the practical effects work that defined the original Star Wars films, a CG recreation of Yoda was out of the question. So according to head creature designer Neal Scanlan—courtesy of a new interview with Nerdist—recreating a Yoda not really seen since Return of the Jedi as a practical puppet again was vital for The Last Jedi:

To know that we were going to have Yoda, we just said, ‘Look we need to go back and look at Empire Strikes Back, we need to look at how Stuart [Freeborn] created Yoda because that is the most pure puppet moment. It’s Frank Oz, who is one of the greatest puppeteers ever, and we knew that Frank was going to redo this. We just felt that it was absolutely right and proper that we create the puppet in the closest likeness to the original and to give Frank exactly what he had the first time around.

Advertisement

Scanlan’s team not only had the daunting prospect of trying to emulate the original Yoda puppet as much as possible—they had access to Lucasfilm’s moulds from the original puppet, but only the head and a single hand remained, requiring extensive research from photographs and even puppeteer Frank Oz’s personal recollections—but also making a modern, lightweight puppet for Oz to use on set. In the end, the puppet was so well-received that, according to Scanlan, he and director Rian Johnson decided to keep Yoda’s Force ghost a little less ghostly in his brief scenes just so people could admire the work:

I remember saying to Rian [Johnson] that if we were going to do it, we couldn’t make him too much of a ghost because it would deny everybody the joy of seeing him solid and real. The [VFX] guys then came in later and added a really lovely glow, which I think just reminds us of the fact that Yoda is there as a ghost, but is there enough for you to really feel that you’re not being cheated.

With his most important lesson passed on, and Luke joining him in the Force, The Last Jedi probably marks the last time we’ll properly see Yoda at this point in the Star War movie timeline—so getting this faithful recreation for his “final” appearance was definitely worth it.